Cat Scratch Disease in Pediatrics: Who Has Systemic Involvement?

Author:

Martínez Lindado Mayra Alejandra1ORCID,Praino María Laura1,Caratozzolo Ana2,Toledano Analía2,Zambrano Cindy Toala1,Tineo María Soledad1,Cazes Claudia Inés1,Contrini María Marta1,López Eduardo Luis1

Affiliation:

1. Pediatric Infectology Service, Children’s Hospital Dr. Ricardo Gutiérrez, Hospital associated with the Faculty of Medicine of the University of Buenos Aires

2. Laboratory of Infectious Research and Molecular Biology, Children’s Hospital Dr. Ricardo Gutiérrez, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Abstract

Background: Bartonella henselae is the agent responsible for cat scratch disease (CSD). Although lymphadenopathy is typically the defining symptom, some patients develop potentially severe systemic compromise. It is unknown why some patients progress to systemic disease. The objective of this study was to describe the clinical, epidemiologic and laboratory characteristics of children with CSD and to analyze the differences between systemic versus localized infections. Methods: Patients were identified by a retrospective review of medical records at a tertiary pediatric care hospital in Buenos Aires, Argentina, from January 2012 to July 2021. A CSD case was defined as any patient who presented compatible clinical findings with a positive serologic test (IgG >1/64 or IgM immunofluorescence) for B. henselae. Results: A total of 197 patients were identified, with a median age of 8 years (range: 1–17.4 years). The most frequent clinical symptoms were fever and lymphadenopathy. Systemic involvement was present in 34.5% (n = 68) of patients and the most common presentation was splenic abscess (n = 51), followed by liver abscess (n = 23), chorioretinitis (n = 9), osteomyelitis (n = 5) and pneumonitis (n = 3). Patients with invasive disease more frequently presented with fever (79.4% vs. 50.3%) (P<0.001) and had higher C-reactive protein levels (24.9 vs. 6.7 mg/L) (P<0.001). Antibiotic therapy was administered to 95.9% (n = 187) of patients and most with systemic disease (77%) used combination treatment. Most patients recovered fully, and there were no reported deaths. Conclusions: CSD must be considered a potential cause of lymphadenopathy. Patients with fever and elevated C-reactive protein should be evaluated to rule out systemic compromise.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Reference17 articles.

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2. Bartonella henselae: evidencia serológica en pacientes pediátricos con sospecha clínica de enfermedad por arañazo de gato.;Armitanoa;Rev Argent Microbiol,2018

3. Cat-scratch disease: 9 years of experience at a pediatric center.;Amin;Open Forum Infect Dis,2022

4. Enfermedad por arañazo de gato como causa de fiebre de origen desconocido.;Santarcángelo;Rev Chilena Infectol,2013

5. Exactitud y utilidad diagnóstica de la IgM en infecciones por Bartonella henselae.;Abarca;Rev Chilena Infectol,2013

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